Denver police arrested four suspects accused of unwittingly trying to sell items they stole back to the burglary victim.

Lacinda Robinson discovered the items missing at her home on Friday and drove to the parking lot of a nearby fast-food restaurant to report the theft. That’s where she said she was approached by two people, who asked her if she wanted to buy a video game set.

Robinson said she was startled when another person walked up wearing her jacket. She went next door to a gas station and found two off-duty police officers who made the arrests.

Robinson told police she is still missing an iPad, a flat-screen TV and some cash.

• An animal rights advocate wants to place a roadside memorial in Georgia to remember several chickens killed in a highway wreck.

A member of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) filed an application for the memorial Wednesday with the Georgia Department of Transportation.

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported if approved, a memorial would be placed at the Hall County site where a truck hauling live chickens overturned Jan. 27.

Sarah Segal of Atlanta writes in her application that she wants to place a 10-foot tombstone memorial for one month on the right of way of U.S. 129 to mark the deaths of the chickens.

The driver of the chicken truck and the other vehicle involved were not seriously injured.

• Big Mouth Billy Bass apparently got the best of a would-be burglar in Minnesota.

Authorities in Rochester said the motion-activated singing fish apparently scared off an intruder who tried to break into the Hooked on Fishing bait and tackle shop.

The novelty bass was hung near the door and would start singing “Take Me to the River” whenever someone entered the shop.

The Olmsted County Sheriff’s Office said the fish was found on the floor after the intruder knocked it down while breaking the door to get in late last Sunday or early Monday.

Sgt. Tom Claymon told the Star Tribune the would-be burglar left without stealing anything, including cash that had been left in “a very visible spot.”

• Police responded to reports of screaming coming from a home in Maine didn’t find a victim of domestic violence as they feared. Instead, they found an amorous pig.

State police said a woman called last week after hearing what she believed to be a fight coming from a neighbor’s home in the town of China. The caller said she heard screaming and thought there was a domestic assault.

The Morning Sentinel reported four state troopers responded and talked to the neighbor.

The neighbor explained that she raises pigs and the screaming was coming from an overjoyed male pig that had been placed in a pen with five sows in heat.

Police said there was no assault and no disturbance “other than the screaming male pig.”